-
Major champions help Philippines chase golf tourist billions
-
Heat and Blazers win first NBA games since Rozier and Billups arrests
-
Trump heads to Asia for Xi talks, eyes Kim meeting
-
More than 60 UN members sign cybercrime treaty opposed by rights groups
-
Trump slams 'dirty' Canada despite withdrawal of Reagan ad
-
Bagnaia seals third Malaysian MotoGP pole in a row
-
Trump heads for Asia and Xi trade talks
-
Blue Jays thrash Dodgers 11-4 to win World Series opener
-
Heat win first game since arrest of Rozier, who has 'full support'
-
Rybakina out of Tokyo semi-finals with injury
-
Messi brace fuels Miami over Nashville in MLS Cup series opener
-
Batting great Williamson cuts back on New Zealand commitments
-
Australia's Cummins shuts down talk of four quicks against England
-
Kerr wants Australia captaincy back on eagerly awaited return
-
NBA chief Silver 'deeply disturbed' by illegal betting scandal
-
North Korea using crypto, IT workers to dodge UN sanctions: report
-
Trump ends Canada access at shared border library
-
'Most beautiful': Thailand's former Queen Sirikit
-
Thailand's former queen Sirikit dead at 93: palace
-
Piastri stays calm after winding up 12th in practice
-
Verstappen on top again as McLaren struggle, Piastri 12th
-
UN members to sign cybercrime treaty opposed by rights groups
-
Heat back Rozier as NBA grapples with gambling scandal fallout
-
Dodgers pitcher Vesia expected to miss World Series: Roberts
-
Red Bull chief says no more 'silly games' after fine
-
US hits Colombia's leader with drug sanctions, sparking sharp rebuke
-
Nuno left waiting for first West Ham win after defeat at Leeds
-
Gambling scandal shows dangers of NBA's embrace of betting
-
Late leveller saves Milan blushes in draw with lowly Pisa
-
NFL fines Giants, coach and rusher for concussion protocol blunders
-
Trump heads for Asia and Xi talks, as Kim speculation swirls
-
Leclerc tops reserve-filled first practice in Mexico
-
Canadians pull tariff ad after furious Trump scraps trade talks
-
Nexperia, the new crisis looming for Europe's carmakers
-
Pope beatifies 11 priests killed by Nazi, Communist regimes
-
Five things to know about Argentina's pivotal midterm election
-
Porsche loses almost one billion euros on shift back to petrol
-
Oasis guitar sold at auction for $385k
-
US sending aircraft carrier to counter Latin America drug traffickers
-
Nigeria sacks top brass after denying coup plot
-
Mexican president hails progress in trade talks with US
-
Sinner waltzes into Vienna semi-finals
-
P&G profits rise as company sees lower tariff hit
-
Forgotten Picasso portrait of Dora Maar sells for $37 mn
-
Rescued baby gorilla to stay in Istanbul after DNA test
-
Fernandes turned down Saudi offer to pursue Man Utd dreams
-
Amorim pleads for 'calm' as Man Utd face Brighton
-
NY attorney general pleads not guilty, says Trump seeking 'revenge'
-
French court gives Algerian woman life sentence for murdering schoolgirl
-
Ex-Liverpool boss Benitez takes over at Panathinaikos
Porsche loses almost one billion euros on shift back to petrol
German sports car maker Porsche sunk to a third-quarter loss of almost one billion euros ($1.16 billion), the firm said Friday, as it grappled with the costs returning to petrol and delaying its electric vehicle (EV) rollout.
Operating profit -- which strips out some costs such as tax -- fell to 40 million euros for the first nine months of the year.
Porsche said in July it had made an operating profit of 1.0 billion euros since the start of the year, meaning it lost about 960 million euros in the months after.
Finance chief Jochen Breckner said the results reflected the cost of Porsche reworking its product portfolio to shift back to petrol vehicles in the face of tepid EV demand.
"This year's results reflect the impact of our strategic realignment," he said. "These measures are essential."
Porsche in September said it would delay the introduction of some fully electric cars and extend the life of some combustion engine and hybrid models.
Its parent company, the Volkswagen Group, booked a 5.1 billion euro hit to its profit for the year based on the costs of Porsche's product rejig as well as it cutting profit targets.
Porsche has come under intense pressure from competitors in top market China and is particularly vulnerable to US President Donald Trump's tariffs as it has no manufacturing footprint in the United States.
Breckner told analysts and investors on a call that "tariff-related costs" had so far amounted to over 500 million euros.
N.Schaad--VB